| back to Past Shows |
![]() Notes on show: Original Airdate 10/29/2006 |
|||||||||||||
About
the Guest
Philip Clayton is the Ingraham Professor of Theology at Claremont School of Theology as well as Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Claremont Graduate University, author of The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Science and God and Contemporary Science, works to develop a constructive position in the dialogue between science, modern philosophy, and theology. Listening
Notes
John and Ken begin by questioning whether or not reason has a role in religious belief, or whether the matter is necessarily one of faith and not argument. Ken is a little dubious about the arguments made for the existence of God, and thinks that regardless of these strategies most believers believe for other reasons. John and Ken go through the typical arguments that have been made for the existence of God throughout history, noticing that many are more interesting to philosophers than they are to everyday people. But John believes that arguments from design are especially powerful, and Ken agrees but points out that Darwin pokes a lot of holes in claims about design. Despite these different tactics Ken thinks that most believers believe because they somehow feel the presence of God in their lives and are spiritually moved towards faith. John
and Ken introduce this week's guest: Philip Clayton, the Ingraham
Professor of Theology at Claremont School of Theology and also visiting
Professor of Religion at Harvard University. John begins by asking Phil
what he thinks is the most moving and powerful argument for the
existence of God. Philip Clayton considers the teleological, or
argument from design, to be the closest to how many believers justify
their faith. He feels that discovering systems through science that
seem to be designed by an intelligent being is a good case for there
being some intelligent designer--if you found a watch on a beach you
would assume that someone built it. John points out that there is a
large gap between the idea of a designer and the concept of an
omnipotent, omniscient, and benevolent being like the Christian God.
Ken
brings up Darwin's theory of evolution and natural selection, as well
as Richard Dawkin's arguments that natural selection is a far more
powerful and intelligent method of design than people normally think.
Philip Clayton acknowledges that after Darwin a theist has a harder
time showing facets of design, but believes that there remain patterns
that lie outside the realm of Darwin's explanations. John distinguishes
between two major post-Darwinian theist positions: that there are gaps
in Darwin's theory and that Darwin's theory must have had a starting
point which may have a role for God. Philip Clayton believes that the
common intelligent design argument that the best scientific explanation
for natural phenomena is that it must have been designed confuses
philosophy and science. Instead he agrees with the latter group that
the fact that there are such elegant and powerful laws, like Darwin's
and other fundamental physical ones, is good evidence that the system
may be tweaked or tuned from the outside. Philip discusses the idea of
"fine tuning" enthropic argument for the existence of God. John
discusses how this strategy relates to Hume's Dialogues
Concerning Natural Religion.
Ken thinks that Philip's argument just replaces one mystery with
another, even though Philip thinks his conclusion is the more rational
one given the evidence.
Ken
moves on to question whether or not any amount of argumentation could
convince a really religious person to believe in God, or vice versa.
Instead isn't it the case that reason plays little role in the choice
to believe? John and Ken take calls from people who discuss their
spiritual experiences and reasons for believing in God, whether they
think rationality and empirical evidence factor into their decision,
how believing and believers effect the world, and whether life can be
complete without some spiritual entity like God.
Additional
Resources
Books
|
||||||||||||||
| ©
2006 Stanford University. All rights reserved. Created by Whitetail Web Design. |